Nvidia's TegraTab that already showed up in a couple of posts online as well as the GFXBench results page, has now appeared at the FCC. The filing also confirms that it is indeed a 7-inch device with a rather unimpressive 1280x800 IPS display.

Although all the specs are not detailed at the FCC, it did show that we are looking at a Tegra 4 equipped device with 7-inch 1280x800 IPS screen, 3200mAh or 4100mAh battery, front HD camera, 5-megapixel rear one, Android Jelly Bean and stylus.

It is also still not clear if Nvidia will sell the device itself or use its partners, but it is now quite clear that device exists and should go against Google's new Nexus 7 and similar budget-friendly devices.

Of course, Nvidia still has to officially announce it and the most important detail will be its price.

We still don’t know what to make of Nvidia’s tablet push. We have learned that a high-end tablet based on the Tegra 5 SoC is coming next year, but we should see a cheaper 7-inch design much sooner.

Now we have the first pics, courtesy of a Chinese tech site. The images appear to show a 7-incher with a few interesting features. It appears to have a stylus bay, which means it will ship with a stylus like a handful of Samsung tablets. Stylus support is still pretty rare on Android tablets, but someone at Nvidia obviously thought that it would be a nice way of differentiating the Tegra Tab from hundreds of 7-inch Androids out there.

The tablet also features microHDMI, which was used in many Android devices a year or two ago, but since then it has gone the way of the dodo.

The back of the device features a 5-megapixel camera and a rubberized finish, similar to the Nexus 7. We still think the Nexus 7 looks a bit classier. It is expected to feature a 1280x800 screen, but we still don’t have any concrete info on the type of SoC, amount of storage, OS version or pricing.

Tegra 4 sounds like overkill for such a device, Tegra 4i is still months away and Tegra 3 is obsolete, so we’re not sure which one will end up in the Tegra Tab. If Nvidia decides to go with a Tegra 4, we could be looking at a pretty powerful device – and judging by the rest of the package it can’t end up very pricey, either.